5 Reasons Batman Always Wins

The Dark Knight Rises comes out soon, and any geek worth his retainer figures the villain Bane will break Bruce Wayne's back so that Joseph Gordon-Levitt can assume the bat-mantle.

DC/AMCSpoiler alert: Maybe!

But the question isn't whether or not Christian Bale will end up in a wheelchair; it's how does paralyzation factor into Batman's goals? Because, you see, there are three inviolable rules in comic books:

Hulk smash

Gravity doesn't work on breasts

and BATMAN NEVER LOSES.

What we perceive as a defeat is just Batman reverting to a less preferable form of victory. So whether he gets crippled or dies, you can be sure it's just the Dark Knight's way of getting the upper hand.

The film's trailer shows Bane whipping Gotham into alternating states of terror and rebellion. What it doesn't show are the five attributes that make Batman undefeatable.

So here's that now, because we love you.

#5. Insanity in Surplus

DCWhoa whoa whoa -- what's this "going" business?

Who is Batman, really? Is Bruce Wayne just Batman playing dumb, or is Batman Bruce Wayne unleashing crazy? The answer: grapefruit orchestra blitz! That's right: both crazier and dumber than you guessed.

We can all agree that Bruce Wayne isn't simply pretending to be disturbed. We just can't tell if Batman is the expression of his illness or the therapy for dealing with it. Until now.

Despite the debate whether Batman is the personality-shelf where Bruce Wayne stores the crazy-plates, one thing is certain: Batman has his own absolutely crazy Batmanlier persona that he saves for the really bad trauma like dad not loving him or losing sex privileges to a supermodel.

All you need to know about the Batman of Zur-En-Arrh is that writer Grant Morrison made Batman into a lunatic hobo-clown guided by a spirit animal who looks like a thalidomide baby. Instead of sorely offending geeks to the point that we won't even acknowledge that bats are real animals, he penned one of the best stories Batman's ever face-stomped his way through.

There are only two possible explanations: Grant Morrison is even crazier than Batman, which we've already established is like being wetter than water ...

... OR BATMAN NEVER LOSES, and Morrison is a genius who had faith in that. He chucked Bats into the most humiliating situation possible, and the Caped Crusader found a way out of it that made him stronger. That's Batman's superpower. If you ever manage to wound the Bat, he'll bleed into your eyes and poison you, because no one shares Bruce Wayne's blood type of Vengeance-positive.

What This Means for the Movie:

Crazy cannot be defeated, it can only be diverted.

Bane has a plan to upheave Gotham. But you know who else had plans? The Waynes, Ra's Al Ghul and Harvey Dent. All of those people are dead now. You know who didn't make plans? The Joker, because he was crazy. And he survived.

It is lunacy, my friends, that settles the day in Gotham City. Sure, Bane is brilliant and powerful, but he made one mistake: He brought logic to a crazy-fight.

#4. He's Prepared for Anything

What was his plan if there wasn't a Moon Scorpion handy?

That's not to say Batman doesn't take charge of every situation, but he's more about the tactics than the strategy. That's why the controller configuration for Batman: Arkham City boiled down to "Break that guy's bones" and "Don't break that guy's bones yet." The only talent necessary to become Batman is to determine whether a thug needs pain, and the criterion for that is "Is he standing where Batman can see him?"

RocksteadyWhy, he breaks his own spine for fun on weekends!

As we've established, Gotham is where plans go to die (and get stitched back together in hideous mockeries of their aspirations). That's why some people say the Joker's a perfect foil for Batman -- he's the embodiment of chaos. This view overlooks the fact that Batman is, too.

Batman wears the night as a costume and makes himself the patron saint of unknown terrors. He isn't about order; he's about control, which is much more protean. He became an avatar of the same unpredictability that ruined his life. Both hero and villain agree that life is horrifying and brutal, but the Joker wants everyone to see that there's nothing to be done for it, so you might as well laugh -- and, in fact, you might not be able to stop laughing well past the point of coughing up blood.

The Dark Knight, by contrast, knows that a diverse skill set readies a man for any situation. And in a city where the parks department poisons white swans, he's right. That's why he carries a tool in his utility belt for every predicament from shark attack to Nicki Minaj concert.

DCPictured: A Nicki Minaj concert.

The Joker is a perfect foil, but only because he wants Batman to see the futility of fighting the inevitable. Like most great comedians, he offers a perfect critique of how screwed we all are, but no solutions beyond "Y'gotta laugh, right?" And Batman, like many offended audiences, keeps interrupting the act to tell him he sucks.

DC, where are my New 52 Adventures of Planetary?Batman fought transdimensional, metafictional archeologists ... and had just the spray for that.

What This Means for the Movie:

Bane's idea for fighting an adaptive vengeance-monster is to change its environment. What are you going to do, incite Gothamites to riot? That's like trying to catch a tiger by slaughtering cows at it.

DCThe man could find a bloody fight in a prayerbook.

Maybe Bane's plan is to raze Gotham itself. Great! Less time that Batman has to waste pretending to be Bruce Wayne. Break his back? Bruce will phone you from a hospital bed made of beautiful women and charm you into punching yourself to death.

(Oh, and good luck overthrowing the social order 20 years after any sense of order was gunned down in Crime Alley.)

What Bane fails to understand is that every moment Batman is force-feeding criminals their own spines, he's doing what he loves, and once there are no more criminals, he's getting what he wants. In any scenario, he's at least breaking even (and femurs).

"But hey, at least he won't kill you," says the rhetorical guy who lives at the end of a section in every Cracked list and never gets tired of being wrong ...

#3. Batman Doesn't Kill Unless He Does

DCThis is like a hurricane arming itself with a tornado.

You know how crooks fear Batman because they don't know he won't kill them? That's because up until the '50s he racked a body count so high that dictators consider it a little excessive. His early adventures all end with him "accidentally" tripping a crook into a vat of acid, and if that failed, he just shot them in the face for the good of society -- a classic tactic of affluent people when the underclass disturb the social order.

... you know, just like Bane intends to do.

I know you think Batman hates guns, but that's Approved by the Comics Code Authority Batman. Original Flavor only left enough gangsters alive to whisper his legend to horrified policemen. Guess which one movie Batman more closely resembles? Most of Nolan's scenes of Batman vs. mobsters are shot exactly like slasher films. Vowing never to pick up a gun doesn't stop a guy who can think of creative ways to kill you with a fierce stare.

Seriously, guys, all of this is DCMy stars, but that boy has a talent.

What This Means for the Movie:

But he doesn't do it anymore, right? Sure, except for all of the time, including when he doesn't feel like fighting. Man, monster, malevolent deity: Batman finds a justification to kill them all. Speaking of death by staring contest, here he is smiling as he assassinates God.

DCBatman dueled God, and God was a little too slow.

Did you see what just happened? The two most common ways of calling something fast are "in the blink of an eye" and "at the speed of light," and Batman outdrew both of them. That is not the gunplay of a man out of practice. The new metaphor for speed just became "half a Batman." And let's also note that he wielded a pistol against a god's eyebeams so the duel would be fair.

So don't think Batman won't kill you if it suits him. Bane will put up a good effort, but in the end he'll get waxed like a Brazilian surfboard. He'd better pray Tom Hardy turns in an Oscar-winning performance, because the only thing that saved Heath Ledger's Joker was charisma. Don't pretend Batman can outdraw a beam of light but can't save Two-Face from falling off a ledge. The truth is, he just didn't care to.